Focus. It’s an entrepreneur’s secret weapon. Again and again in the #Netflix story—dropping DVD sales, dropping à la carte rentals, and eventually dropping many members of the original Netflix team—we had to be willing to abandon parts of the past in service of the future.
I’ve been part of starting 7 companies. 3 had an IPO. 4 were acquired. The all struggled. If you had asked me before they started, which would be which, I never could have told you. ‘Cause nobody knows anything.
Consider the alkaline battery.
If you needed a way to test the amount of charge there is a simple mechanical method.
The bounce test.
ZnO becomes almost ceramic after 50% of the charge is gone and thus will bounce higher by the increased density.
There are so many "startup photos" that inspire me. My two favorites:
1. Jeff Bezos in a tiny office with spray painted Amazon logo. Humble beginnings.
2. Steve Jobs & the Macintosh team sitting on their office floor. Baby in the photo reminds me that startups are a family.
As one of two people to be the first to take a “computer” class in high school in 79/80 I find this very cool. We wrote code, drove to the University to type it in, create the data cards and run them. My how things have changed. 🤔
It was like yesterday when I picked up Apple Computer, Inc. Stock Certificates back in December 1980.
I dreamed of this world where everyone would carry their own computer
I framed this one to always remember.
Thanks a Trillion Apple, you changed the world...
Kobe on transformation.
His journey form looking inward to looking outward.
A journey we are all on.
This 1:56 is transcendent and transformative.
Lifted a light up to show the path and lifted our spirits up to know it can be done.
One of the reasons he is our world hero.
I used to think...
Facebook was built by geniuses with supercomputers.
My favorite writers knew every word in the dictionary.
The best artists could draw everything out of their head.
Now I realize they’re all just people who work hard, edit excessively, and copy constantly.
Chill out. Every successful career I’ve ever known was filled with long periods of meandering, when no one knew what would happen next. Look at me: I started as a geology major turned failed realtor. I didn’t really know what I was good at until I was nearly 30 years old.
Overplanning and overdesigning is often just overthinking—or just plain old procrastination. When it comes to ideas, it’s more efficient to test ten bad ones than spend days trying to come up with something perfect.
#startups#entrepreneur
If you’re in a business where you rarely actually “see” your customer, you have to make an extra effort into envisioning each and every customer as an individual.
#thatwillneverwork#customer#entrepreneur#startups